Abstract

‘HoneySweet’ plum (Prunus domestica) is resistant to Plum pox potyvirus, through an RNAi-triggered mechanism. Determining the precise nature of the transgene insertion event has been complicated due to the hexaploid genome of plum. DNA blots previously indicated an unintended hairpin arrangement of the Plum pox potyvirus coat protein gene as well as a multicopy insertion event. To confirm the transgene arrangement of the insertion event, ‘HoneySweet’ DNA was subjected to whole genome sequencing using Illumina short-read technology. Results indicated two different insertion events, one containing seven partial copies flanked by putative plum DNA sequence and a second with the predicted inverted repeat of the coat protein gene driven by a double 35S promoter on each side, flanked by plum DNA. To determine the locations of the two transgene insertions, a phased plum genome assembly was developed from the commercial plum ‘Improved French’. A subset of the scaffolds (2447) that were >10 kb in length and representing, >95% of the genome were annotated and used for alignment against the ‘HoneySweet’ transgene reads. Four of eight matching scaffolds spanned both insertion sites ranging from 157,704 to 654,883 bp apart, however we were unable to identify which scaffold(s) represented the actual location of the insertion sites due to potential sequence differences between the two plum cultivars. Regardless, there was no evidence of any gene(s) being interrupted as a result of the insertions. Furthermore, RNA-seq data verified that the insertions created no new transcriptional units and no dramatic expression changes of neighboring genes.

Highlights

  • Abstract ‘HoneySweet’ plum (Prunus domestica) is resistant to Plum pox potyvirus, through an RNAi-triggered mechanism

  • ‘HoneySweet’ is derived from a ‘Bluebyrd’ x unknown pollen parent seed that had been transformed with a pox potyvirus (PPV) coat protein gene (CP), driven by the 35S promoter[3]

  • Further DNA blotting experiments suggested that there was a rearrangement of the inserted DNA resulting in a predicted hairpin of two CP genes as well as a separate multicopy arrangement of the transgenes[4]

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Summary

Introduction

Abstract ‘HoneySweet’ plum (Prunus domestica) is resistant to Plum pox potyvirus, through an RNAi-triggered mechanism. A map was constructed based on these junction sites resulting in two separate insertion events, each flanked by plum DNA (Fig. 1). The predicted arrangement of the multiple copies was confirmed by mapping the ‘HoneySweet’ DNA sequence reads to the predicted insert 1 and 2 sequence.

Results
Conclusion
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